Amazon, JP Morgan and Berkshire Hathaway team up on health-care plan 'free from profit-making'

Amazon, JP Morgan and Berkshire Hathaway team up on health-care plan 'free from profit-making'

Amazon is diving into health care, teaming up with Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway and the New York bank JPMorgan Chase, to create a company that helps their U.S. employees find quality care "at a reasonable cost."

Shares in health care and insurance companies plunge in anticipation of new venture

Berkshire Hathaway's Warren Buffett, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and JP Morgan Chase chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon, left to right, are teaming up on an ambitious new employee health-care plan. (The Associated Press)

Amazon is diving into health care, teaming up with Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway and the New York bank JPMorgan Chase, to create a company that helps their U.S. employees find quality care "at a reasonable cost."

The leaders of each company — Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Buffett, and JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon — offered few details Tuesday and said the project is in the early planning stage.

"The ballooning costs of (health care) act as a hungry tapeworm on the American economy," Buffett said in a prepared statement. "Our group does not come to this problem with answers. But we also do not accept it as inevitable."

The new company will be independent and "free from profit-making incentives and constraints." The businesses said the new venture's initial focus would be on technology that provides "simplified, high-quality and transparent" care.

It was not clear if the ultimate goal involves expanding the ambitious project beyond Amazon, Berkshire or JPMorgan. However, JPMorgan's Dimon said Tuesday that, "our goal is to create solutions that benefit our U.S. employees, their families and, potentially, all Americans."

Shares in health care companies took a big hit in early trading Tuesday, hinting at the threat of the new entity to how health care is paid for and delivered in the U.S.

Before the opening bell, eight of the top 10 decliners on the Standard & Poor's 500 index were health-care companies.

The need for a solution to the health-care crises in the U.S. is intense. With about 151 million non-elderly people, employer-sponsored coverage is the largest part of the U.S. health insurance market.

Health-care costs for companies routinely rise faster than inflation and eat up bigger portions of their budgets. Americans are mired in a confusing system that creates a mix of prices in the same market for the same procedure or drug and offers no easy path for finding the best deal.

Employers have hiked deductibles and other expenses for employees and their families to dissipate the costs, which has hit Americans hard.

Only 50 per cent of companies with three to 49 employees offered coverage last year, according to the non-profit Kaiser Family Foundation. That's down from 66 per cent more than a decade ago. The federal Affordable Care Act requires all companies with 50 or more full-time employees to offer it.

Amazon, Berkshire and JP Morgan say they can bring their scale and "complementary expertise" to what they describe as a long-term campaign.